Vol Walker Hall, home of the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design
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Established | 1946 |
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Dean | Peter MacKeith |
Academic staff
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35 |
Students | 522 (2012) |
Location |
Fayetteville, Arkansas, USA 36°04′07″N 94°10′22″W / 36.06868°N 94.17268°WCoordinates: 36°04′07″N 94°10′22″W / 36.06868°N 94.17268°W |
Campus | University of Arkansas |
Affiliations | University of Arkansas |
Website | http://fayjones.uark.edu/ |
The Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design at the University of Arkansas offers education in these fields: architecture, landscape architecture, interior design.
Five degrees total may be attained from the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design: the Bachelor of Architecture (B.Arch.) and Bachelor of Landscape Architecture (B.L.A.), each of which requires about 10 semesters of work; Bachelor of Interior Design (B.I.D.), which is a nine-semester program; and the Bachelor of Science in Architectural Studies (ARSTBS) and Bachelor of Science in Landscape Architecture Studies (LARCBS), both of which are the basis for graduate work in architecture or further education in other fields. Several minors are also available.
The University of Arkansas Community Design Center was founded in 1995 as part of the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design.
Garvan Woodland Gardens, located near Hot Springs, Ark., is a viable and sustainable entity within the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. This program furthers the University’s mission of teaching, research and public service. It was established in honor of the heiress Verna Cook Garvan. Prior to her death in 1993, Garvan worked with landscape architecture faculty at the Fay Jones School to develop 210 wooded acres on Lake Hamilton near Hot Springs into a woodland botanical garden.
Vol Walker Hall was built in 1935 as the university’s library. Since 1968, it has served as home to the architecture school, although some programs of the school have been located in other campus facilities during that time. The renovated historic building, plus the significant addition, allows the school, for the first time, to accommodate the faculty and students of all three disciplines – architecture, landscape architecture and interior design – along with support staff, in a shared space.
The Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design began in 1946-47 as architecture courses within the College of Engineering, with John G. Williams teaching 17 students, including future faculty members E. Fay Jones and Ernie Jacks. In 1948, the architecture program transferred into the College of Arts and Sciences. The National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB) accredited the architecture program in 1958. The landscape architecture program was established in 1975 and has been accredited by the Landscape Architecture Accreditation Board (LAAB) of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) since 1983. After many years in planning, the Interior Design program moved to the school in July 2010. The Interior Design program is a CIDA (Council of Interior Design Accreditation) accredited program.
In 1974, the program became a school, with Fay Jones serving as the first dean. In 2009, the school was renamed the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design, at the request of Don and Ellen Edmondson, former clients of Jones', who made a $10 million planned gift.